First of all, let me say that hearing Michael speak in person is riveting. To say that he commands a room is an understatement; his turn of phrase, the sucker-punch-to-the-gut way he has of encapsulating events and concepts, the dry humor and raw emotion, the scope of his intelligence and awareness of causation and consequence -- all of that is in play far more than comes across through a television camera. Even exhausted to the brink of collapse (as I daresay he was at these events) he is a constant blur of motion as he pulls the audience along the path of understanding.

He has often said that he feels an obligation to bear witness to the events he has seen in Iraq. I would go further and say he seems to feel the need to make us understand what we have wrought by starting this war (and whether we voted in favor of it or not, we as a country must own it) and that he possesses the rare gift of making people see what they would prefer to avoid. The sheer force of his personality and the rawness of his honesty demands nothing less.

I was also fortunate enough to speak with him briefly after the CAP event and found him to be gracious, humble, charming, and blazingly intense. It was a privilege to be able to thank him for his work. It is why I started my website and why it continues to this day -- because his work is so incredibly vital. I could never do what he does, but I can contribute my site in order to make sure that his work is seen by as many people as possible.

(But if you ever have a chance to hear him speak, I definitely urge you to go!)

Also... Monday, CNN International is showing a 30-minute special about the Surge, the creation of which is the reason Michael has been so exhausted these past couple of weeks...

Iraq - Inside the SurgeThe U.S. military surge in Iraq has reportedly brought insurgent attacks and sectarian killings to their lowest levels in years. CNN's Michael Ware embedded with U.S. forces in Iraq to see the situation first-hand. He shares his experiences in this CNN special report.

Mon Apr 7: 2130, Tue April 8: 0130, 0630, 1130 GMT

And the "Inside the Middle East" blog also ran this photo the other day:

CNN correspondent Michael Ware and cameraman Joe Duran,

embedded with U.S. troops in central Iraq. March 11th, 2008.

(Photo CNN's Thomas Evans)

I'm afraid that's it for me today... no "Where in the World" due to the fact that there was no way to get through everything last night (thanks to a planned 4-hour stopover at JFK turning into an 8-hour one!) and the need to erase the clips for new stuff. (The TiVos totally missed the Friday shows, including the lone appearance Michael made on CNN this week... arrgh!) But it shall return next Saturday!

6 comments:

Great post Cyn! It was incredible to hear Michael Ware’s two talks on podcast, but reading your post about actually being there was very riveting!I wish CNN would air Michael’s special “Iraq – Inside the Surge” on domestic for those of us who can’t receive International. But I’ll be looking forward to seeing it on your site. Thank you so much for all your work in delivering Mick’s message to us!

I think CNN should run 15 minute to 30 minutemini docs as well. There needs to be somein depth reporting on things from time to time without time restraints. I am hopingmaybe when Ballot Bowl runs it's coursethat they will continue with more programslike this with CNN reports offering morein depth reports that can run as long asneed be without being pressed form time.Have the reporters do short intros abouttheir stories and add cool music and graphicsand short countdowns telling you whichstory will be coming up next( like 5 secondsto Michael Ware). They could use the coolbar they used earlier this year on 360.Along with cool stuff for CNN.com andAOL and all of Time Warners magazinesas well as reports from CNN I to takeus all around the world.